Brands need to be looking beyond International Women’s Day
Now that International Women’s Day has passed, the real question for companies is not whether they spoke up on the 8th March, but what they do in the days and months that follow.
Genuine commitment to gender equality is not measured in posts or press releases, but instead is measured in the programmes companies run, the women they champion, and the platforms they create throughout the year. Every year, we see the same pattern: a flurry of activity around 8th March, followed by silence. The brands that get it right are those that treat International Women’s Day as the beginning of a conversation, rather than its conclusion.
The problem with performative communication
International Women’s Day has become an unmissable media moment, and with that visibility comes risk. The day has been widely co-opted by brands, giving rise to opportunistic campaigns and poorly framed messaging that audiences are increasingly good at spotting. When the public message does not match internal reality, media and stakeholders notice quickly, and the reputational damage can far outweigh any goodwill the original communication generated.
The most credible communications are grounded in facts and concrete commitments. Communicating on gender equality without sharing real data about your own organisation, whether that is pay gaps, access to leadership roles, parental leave policies or efforts to address recruitment bias, is where brands get caught out. Audiences and journalists are looking beyond the messaging now. They want to see the numbers, the initiatives and the honest acknowledgement of where progress still needs to happen.
That kind of transparency is not a reputational risk, but in actuality, it is a driver of trust.
What year round commitment actually looks like
So what does that actually look like in practice? Here are three things brands can do to build a credible, sustained approach to gender equality throughout the year.
Back your communications with data: Publish precise figures, measurable commitments and medium term objectives. An annual internal review, shared publicly, grounds your communications in something tangible and builds a track record over time. Without it, any messaging around equality risks looking like just that – messaging.
Elevate women’s expertise consistently: Not just on International Women’s Day, but throughout the year. That means creating genuine platforms for women to speak as industry experts and thought leaders at events, in media commentary and in business decision making. Not to mark an occasion, but because their perspective adds real value. There is a difference between visibility and tokenism, and audiences know it.
Build initiatives with staying power. Mentoring and sponsorship schemes that open doors at every level, internal networks that give women a genuine voice, partnerships with organisations working on the ground, and leadership pipelines that move beyond intention into action. These are the commitments that matter, and they need a clear roadmap behind them, not just an announcement.
The credibility test
Before any communication, whether tied to a calendar moment or not, three questions are worth asking. Do we have measurable, verifiable data to support this? Are we prepared to answer questions about our figures and areas for improvement? And is this consistent with our actual policies and long term commitments?
If the answer to any of these is uncertain, the strategy needs more work.
Lasting credibility is built by the companies that do not need a calendar moment to justify their commitment.
The day may have passed. The work hasn’t.

































